Entry tags:
the first time I made mincemeat of the standard propositions establishing a so-called moral science
WHO: Byerly Rutyer and Wysteria Poppell
WHAT: She's stuck with him for 3 hours
WHEN: Whenever
WHERE: On the road
NOTES: He's a smutmonger??
WHAT: She's stuck with him for 3 hours
WHEN: Whenever
WHERE: On the road
NOTES: He's a smutmonger??
[ It's not a terrible trip from Kirkwall to Greencliff. Thirty miles along the coast, and a journey decently worth taking: Greencliff is a striking city, with a high copper content in the mineral cliffs giving them a curious greenish tint. Not particularly built-up, not a center of commerce or of war, but quite nice nevertheless. There are a multiple trips by commercial carriage out there per day. So, logically, the odds of running into someone you don't want to run into are relatively small.
Thank the Maker Wysteria isn't a betting woman, because it's clear enough her luck today is rotten.
Because not only does she end up in a carriage with Byerly, Byerly was running late. So that means that it's when she's well and truly settled, and when the wagon is but a few breaths from departing, that he scrambles in. The door closes behind him as he pants, clearly come off a sprint for it; the driver gives a cry; the horses lurch into motion; there's no time for her to escape.
Perhaps a stroke of good luck for the girl, though. By, for once, is so genuinely overcome with the aftereffects of drink that he doesn't even take the time to investigate his surroundings. Instead, he flops over the bench, and throws his arm across his eyes, and groans, all without ever having seen her. ]

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With everything going on in the world, I imagine that might be very appealing. To live somewhere so secluded for a time. Were they-- he, rather-- in the rebellion directly?
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[ A lift of a single shoulder. He draws a card, rearranges his hand. ]
I'd not spoken to him for years before the war. By the time I thought to check in on him, he'd already vanished. No one quite sure what had happened. Some said he'd set off traveling to Redcliffe, some said he'd arrived; some said he'd died in battle; some said he'd tried to oppose the rebel forces; who knows? That is, simply, war. A perpetual state of not knowing.
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[She draws a card. Oh, this one suits actually...]
I'm sorry to hear you've lost touch with him. [She glances in his direction and gives Byerly a swift, narrow smile. This is all politeness.] My luck for the arrival of some good news when this is all over.
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What a kind and heartfelt sentiment, Miss Poppell. I don't think I'll ever forget kindness like that.
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Of course. Happily given.
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Do you know what they do to apostates in some parts of Thedas?
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I've done my reading. I believe it used to be that Templars captured and executed them. Or turned them into Tranquil. Though what's being done with any apostates now given the condition of the Templar Order, I couldn't say.
[And somehow she doubts he's talking about the things she might find in a book. Bestial things happen to people sometimes. Everyone knows this.]
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[ And he lowers his eyes, significantly, to her cards, then lifts them to her face again. ]
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Come now, Mr Rutyer. I was of course speaking in reference to outside the Inquisition.
[She clears her throat. Draws another card.]
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[ He lowers insouciant eyelashes and asks her - ]
What do you think the Inquisition is, dear mademoiselle?
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[With a series of aggressive discards, Wysteria brings a selection of new cards into her hand.]
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Besides, I can't imagine that were the Inquisition to suddenly decide otherwise that it would be happily received by any of the mages fighting in the name for the rest of you. It hardly seems worth the effort to go murdering anyone after all the effort involved with keeping one another alive. And honestly, if you're all so determined to kill each other, then what are we even doing here? Well what are you doing here. I don't have much choice in the matter.
[Another discard. Another draw. Where in the devil's name is that Angel?]
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If you think that, dear girl, then you know nothing of Thedas. You know nothing of people. If we destroy the Venatori and Corypheus' forces, then bravo us. Peace will come. It may even last a full year. But then, soon as the memory of his threat fades, we'll all be turning on each other again. Mages against templars, elves against humans, Orlais against Ferelden. Us against you. You're young, but surely not so young that you don't know that.
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I never would have taken you for such a pessimist, Mr Rutyer.
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[ His smile is sardonic. There's a bite in his voice. He's not even looking at the cards. ]
You think a man drinks like I do because he's happy with the state of the world?
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I think I don't care even the slightest bit for why a man might drink as you do, Messere.
[She draws from the top of the thinning deck, thinking with all her might of the guide marks placed on that Angel card so she might summon them to her fingertips. The trouble is, of course, that over the course of so many hands and so much swapping and trading of cards, that the entire deck and both their hands are so marked up by the traces of her own magick that it's an easy thing to reach past the deck of drawing cards itself.
The card comes to hand. The one in Byerly's possession simply becomes-- different. As if it were never there at all.]
What a shame. It seems my luck's run out.
[Wysteria tosses the Angel face up in her lap. Her own hand, miserably awful and the certain loser, follows it.]
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No one ever does.
[ He tosses down his cards, then, displaying them to her. His is the winning hand. ]
It's a neat trick, Miss Poppell, and one that will get your throat cut if you use it so carelessly in true play. Perhaps it will get your throat cut now. It would be quite a simple thing to report your skills to certain interested parties, after all.
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[Now there is a lie that might, given any other circumstances at all, be convincing. It's been honed to perfection by all that simmering heat, made arch and elegant by her sudden well of purposeful reserve.]
But threatening young women is hardly the way to go about earning anyone's sympathy.
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[ The cards are taken up, gathered into a tight deck. He smiles as he shuffles, though the expression is icy-cold. ]
What makes you think I desire sympathy? You knew the truth of my character the moment we spoke. I am a villain of the first order. Surely you're not so addled that you've forgotten that.
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Of course. You'll have to forgive me; the dark in this carriage is terribly disorienting.
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[ His hard smile remains even as he continues to shuffle. ]
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I'm afraid you've asked quite a few questions and lost me entirely, Messere. You'll have to take pity on me and specify which one I'm meant to answer truthfully.
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[ Another shuffle. ]
My question is this. If your enemies come for you - and do not demur, Miss Poppell, for you have enemies, even if you don't yet know their faces - who do you think will watch your back?
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Is that really what you want to know? How frightened I am about being alone in a strange place with no friends or countrymen or common sense to my name.
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